Try your luck with this hand
- Can these resources be aggregated and legally released as a derivative work?
- Yes
- Correct. Resources in the public domain and CC-BY licensed materials can be mixed with the GNU FDL.
- No
- Incorrect. These licenses are compatible -- public domain and CC-BY materials can be mixed with the GNU FDL.
- Which of the following licenses could be used for the derivative work:
- All rights reserved Copyright
- Incorrect. The GNU FDL (a copyleft license) requires that derivative works are released under the same share-alike license.
- CC-BY
- Incorrect. This would be incompatible with the share-alike provisions of the GNU FDL.
- Released under a public domain declaration
- Incorrect.The CC-BY has an attribution requirement and attribution is not a legal requirement of resources in the public domain and the GNU FDL requires modifications to be released under the identical share-alike license.
- GNU FDL
- Correct The derivative work can be released under the GNU FDL as this would be in accordance with the share-alike provisions of the FDL.
- BY-SA
- Incorrect. While the BY-SA license has similar intentions and is "philosophically" aligned with the GNU FDL, the FDL requires that derivative works are released under the same license, and consequently equivalent share-alike licenses cannot be used.
- BY-NC-ND
- Incorrect. Adding more restrictions would not be in accordance with the GNU FDL.
- BY-NC-SA
- Incorrect. Adding the non-commercial restriction is not permitted by the GNU FDL, however the more substantive reason is that the GNU FDL requires modifications to be released under the identical license.
This is a remix inspired by the online version of David Wiley's OER remix game.
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